Question: If I perceive something negative in the qualities of the friends and recognize evil in my attitude toward them, how can I see all of this within me?
Answer: When you look at a friend, you discern evil in him. But how do you see the evil within yourself? Here, problems arise. This is where a mistake can slip in.
You cannot claim now that you see something bad in the friend because your Kelim are uncorrected, and then justify them by saying that the Creator stands behind them. Such an approach is incorrect, because it is an incorrect evaluation of the state. It is not true, not real.
The point is that all of us are uncorrected and all are opposite to the Creator. And if I intend to examine my inner Kelim in relation to others, then I say that my attitude toward them is egoistic.
Moreover, the definition of “others” can include the friends, the Creator, and the rest of creation; it is all the same. After all, I am an egoist. Everything outside of me—my friends, the other parts of creation—are egoists too.
Besides this, there is the Creator, that is, the absolute, eternal, altruistic quality. There is a difference between the concepts of “friends” and “the Creator.” If I say that my attitude toward others is bad because I am bad and they are good, then I will have no one to work with. This is an incorrect approach.
In that case, I would be evaluating them not according to what they are now, but according to what they are meant to become in the state of the final correction. Such an approach is wrong.
I must see both myself and them realistically, and then I will be able to unite with them in order to come together to correction. I must see my friends, not as though they are already corrected, but as they truly are now, so that I may have a group with which I go to attack.
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From the Daily Kabbalah Lesson 5/4/26, Rabash, “What Is Heaviness of the Head in the Work?”



